Certainly not everyone. I'm not going to be giving them money. But I will watch and see what the early adopters have to say, or not say, about it when they finally ship something. Honestly I don't have my hopes up.

I can see the law suits being prepared now and I doubt if this will be such a simplistic solution as stated in the video as you still need to have proper placement and adhere to the laws of physics.

Why not make it look like a microphone and I doubt if just clipping this on a source will produce the results in the demo video. There will still be the need to monitor what you are recording as you may just end up with nothing or un-useable audio.

Good luck to them but I see lots of pages on the forums regarding the poor audio that is being attained from the DSLR / rode videomic generation.

The clever bit is the electronics - and like gopro, it fills a gap. The wedding people will love it - they are eternally complaining about getting microphones to places where even a zoom is too big. If the electronics work, and the battery lasts long enough, it's a winner. Microphone wise, electrets even of the very, very cheap type are surprisingly good - sure, not perfect, but look at how many theatre people use £30 chinese headsets on amateurs who destroy DPAs? The difference in quality is surprisingly small, and not a stellar difference. Most complaints are not about audio, but mechanical quality.

It reminds me a bit of the Sansa Clip, with all the features that Sansa forgot to include.

Or of the earlier Archos Ondio, which preceeded the Clip by at least five years, and had more features, but lower bitrate and worse audio.

So if Archos and Sandisk could pull this off (with the technology available at the respective time) then this seems entirely within reach, at least from a technical perspective. (However, I think 2GB is not nearly enough internal RAM. It should be at least 4GB to allow for recording of a long concert or other event.)

A bigger question is market size. Both the Ondio and the Clip were marketed as consumer MP3 players with audio recording as a secondary feature (along with FM tuner, etc.). Thus they had a huge potential customer base. If this new product is marketed as a semi-pro audio recorder, will there be enough prospective buyers to "make the numbers work" and make a profit after paying for all the development costs?

Last edited by Greg Miller; June 21st, 2015 at 08:07 AM.

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